Ito's Lemma is named for its discoverer, the brilliant Japanese mathematician
Kiyoshi Ito. The human race lost this extraordinary individual on November 10, 2008.
He died at age 93. His work created a field of mathematics that is a calculus
of stochastic variables.

Changes in a variable such as stock price involve a
deterministic component
which is a function of time and a stochastic component
which depends upon a
random variable. Let S be the stock price at time t and let dS be the
infinitesimal change in S over the infinitesimal interval of time dt.
The change in the random variable z over this interval of time is dz.
The change in stock price is given by

(1)

dS = adt + bdz,

where a and b may be functions of S and t as well as other variables; i.e., dS = a(S,t,x)dt+b(S,t,x)dz.

The expected value of dz is zero so the expected value of dS is equal to
the deterministic component, adt.

The random variable dz represents an accumulation of random influences over
the interval dt. The Central Limit Theorem then implies that dz has a
normal distribution and hence is completely characterized by its mean
and standard deviation. The mean or expected value of dz is zero. The
variance of a random variable which is the accumulation of independent
effects over an interval of time is proportional to the length of the
interval, in this case dt. The standard deviation of dz is thus proportional
to the square root of dt, (dt)½. All of this means that
the random variable dz is equivalent to a random variable
w(dt)½, where w is a standard normal variable with mean zero
and standard deviation equal to unity.

Now consider another variable C, such as the price of a call option, which is
a function of S and t, say C = f(S, t). Because C is a function of the
stochastic variable S, C will have a stochastic component as well as a
deterministic component. C will have a representation of the form:

(2)

dC = pdt + qdz.

where p and q may be functions of S, t and possibly other variables; i.e., p=p(S,t,x) and q=q(S,t,x).

The crucial problem is how the functions p and q are related to the functions
a and b in the equation

(3)

dS = adt + bdz.

Ito's Lemma gives the answer. The deterministic and stochastic components
of dC are given by:

(4)

p=∂f/∂t+(∂f/∂S)a
+½(∂²f/∂S²)
b²
q = (∂f/∂S)b.

Ito's Lemma is crucial in deriving differential equations for the value of
derivative securities such as stock options.

dS = adt + bdz
but
dz=vw[dt]½,

where w is a standard normal random variable and v is the scale of the variability of the random element; i.e., its standard deviation.
Substitution of adt + bvw(dt)½ for dS in the above
equation (5) yields:
(6)

Taking into account the infinitesimal nature of dt so that dt to any power
higher than unity vanishes, (7) reduces to:
(8)

dC = (∂f/∂t)dt + (∂f/∂S)adt
+ (∂f/∂S)bvw(dt)½
+ ½(∂²f/∂S²)(b²v²w²dt)

Noting that the expected value of w² is unity, the expected
value of dC
is:
(9)

[∂f/∂t + (∂f/∂S)a
+ ½(∂²f/∂S²)b²]dt.

This is the deterministic component of dC. The stochastic component is the
term that depends upon dz, which in (8) is represented as vw(dt)½.
Therefore the stochastic component is:
(10)

[(∂f/∂S)b]dz.

From the above derivation it would seem that there is an additional
stochastic term that arises from the random deviations of w²
from its expected value of 1; i.e., the additional term
(11)

½(∂²f/∂S²)(b²v²w²dt).

However the variance of this additional term is proportional to (dt)²
whereas the variance of the stochastic term given in (10) is proportional
to (dt). Thus the stochastic term given in (11) vanishes in comparison
with the stochastic term given in (10).